Illuminating the past 8 billion years of cold gas towards two gravitationally lensed quasars

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 465:4 (2016) 4450-4467

Authors:

JR Allison, VA Moss, J-P Macquart, SJ Curran, SW Duchesne, EK Mahony, EM Sadler, MT Whiting, KW Bannister, AP Chippendale, PG Edwards, L Harvey-Smith, I Heywood, BT Indermuehle, E Lenc, J Marvil, D McConnell, RJ Sault

The growth of the central region by acquisition of counter-rotating gas in star-forming galaxies

(2016)

Authors:

Yan-Mei Chen, Yong Shi, Christy A Tremonti, Matt Bershady, Michael Merrifield, Eric Emsellem, Yi-Fei Jin, Song Huang, Hai Fu, David A Wake, Kevin Bundy, David Stark, Lihwai Lin, Maria Argudo-Fernandez, Thaisa Storchi Bergmann, Dmitry Bizyaev, Joel Brownstein, Martin Bureau, John Chisholm, Niv Drory, Qi Guo, Lei Hao, Jian Hu, Cheng Li, Ran Li, Alexandre Roman Lopes, Kai-Ke Pan, Rogemar A Riffel, Daniel Thomas, Lan Wang, Kyle Westfall, Ren-Bin Yan

Galaxy and mass assembly: the 1.4 GHz SFR indicator, SFR–M* relation and predictions for ASKAP–GAMA

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 466:2 (2016) 2312-2324

Authors:

Luke JM Davies, Minh T Huynh, Andrew M Hopkins, Nick Seymour, Simon P Driver, Aaron GR Robotham, Ivan K Baldry, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Nathan Bourne, Malcolm N Bremer, Michael JI Brown, Sarah Brough, Michelle Cluver, Meiert W Grootes, Matthew Jarvis, Jonathan Loveday, Amanda Moffet, Matt Owers, Steven Phillipps, Elaine Sadler, Lingyu Wang, Stephen Wilkins, Angus Wright

Abstract:

We present a robust calibration of the 1.4 GHz radio continuum star formation rate (SFR) using a combination of the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey and the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-cm (FIRST) survey. We identify individually detected 1.4 GHz GAMA-FIRST sources and use a late-type, non-AGN, volume-limited sample from GAMA to produce stellar mass-selected samples. The latter are then combined to produce FIRST-stacked images. This extends the robust parametrisation of the 1.4 GHz-SFR relation to faint luminosities. For both the individually detected galaxies and our stacked samples, we compare 1.4 GHz luminosity to SFRs derived from GAMA to determine a new 1.4 GHz luminosity-to-SFR relation with well constrained slope and normalisation. For the first time, we produce the radio SFR-M⇤ relation over 2 decades in stellar mass, and find that our new calibration is robust, and produces a SFR-M⇤relation which is consistent with all other GAMA SFR methods. Finally, using our new 1.4 GHz luminosity-to-SFR calibration we make predictions for the number of star-forming GAMA sources which are likely to be detected in the upcoming ASKAP surveys, EMU and DINGO.

Large-scale filamentary structures around the Virgo cluster revisited

(2016)

Authors:

Suk Kim, Soo-Chang Rey, Martin Bureau, Hyein Yoon, Aeree Chung, Helmut Jerjen, Thorsten Lisker, Hyunjin Jeong, Eon-Chang Sung, Youngdae Lee, Woong Lee, Jiwon Chung

SPECTROPOLARIMETRY OF SUPERLUMINOUS SUPERNOVAE: INSIGHT INTO THEIR GEOMETRY

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 831:1 (2016) 79

Authors:

C Inserra, M Bulla, SA Sim, SJ Smartt